Liu Di
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Liu Di (Traditional Chinese: 劉荻, Simplified: 刘荻), a former psychology major at Beijing Normal University who wrote under the screen name "Stainless Steel Mouse", became a high-profile symbol for democracy and free speech in China since her detention in November 2002.
Liu's case comes during a crackdown on Internet content -- from politics to pornography -- and as the government struggles to gain control over a new and popular medium.
The reasons for Liu's detention were satirizing the CCP online and calling for the release of other "cyber-dissidents." Her arrest caused a flurry of worldwide media protest.
She was freed from Beijing's Qincheng prison on Friday, November 28, 2003. Two other "cyber-dissidents", Wu Yiran, and Li Yibin, were also freed from a jail for political detainees.
[edit] See also
- List of Chinese dissidents
- Human Rights Watch page on Liu Di.
- International Freedom of Expression Exchange monitors Internet censorship in China [1]